9 Best Free Personal Email (Webmail) Service Providers in the World

When it comes to creating a new email account, most people go with Gmail, Outlook or Yahoo mail. But, there are so many email service providers on the internet who provide better email services for free. Gmail is the most popular service in the world, and there are many reasons why it always a people’s choice.

When I was comparing email providers for this article, I exclude the popularity factor from my list. Here, I’m going to list the best and secure email providers in the world. I compare features, security, mailbox storage, synchronization support for email clients and more other things that make an email provider best.

Gmail is the best, free (ad-supported) email service in the world, offers up to 15 GB mailbox storage and high-level security to your inbox. The service has more than 1 billion active users worldwide, which is more than a social network like Twitter and Instagram.

Your Gmail email address ends with @gmail.com, or you can use a custom domain with Gmail for work.

The service supports 72 languages across the world. Users can access their emails through POP3, IMAP and SMTP protocols without subscribing Gmail for work.

Microsoft’s Outlook is one of the best email services in the world, founded in 1996. The service is free (ad-supported) and offers unlimited mailbox storage to all users. Outlook has more than 400 million active users worldwide, as of 2015.

Your Outlook email account address ends with @outlook.com or @hotmail.com, or you can use a custom domain by subscribing Outlook.com Premium. The email service supports 106 languages across the world. Outlook users can use POP3, IMAP and SMTP protocols for free.

Zoho Mail service is absolutely free for personal users, even they didn’t display ads on free accounts. As a free user, you will get 5 GB mailbox storage and maximum 3 MB file attachment limit for your emails. Your Zoho email address ends with @zoho.com, or you can use a custom domain too. Free users can access POP3, IMAP and SMTP protocols.

Yahoo mail is a free (ad-supported) webmail service, offers 1 TB mailbox storage for each user. You can connect all of your email accounts (e.g., Gmail, Outlook, Hotmail and AOL) to your Yahoo inbox, and manage all inboxes from one place. The service allows all users to access POP3, IMAP and SMTP protocols for free. The maximum attachment limit per email in Yahoo mail is 25 MB.

If you have a iOS device or a Mac, you will already know about the iCloud mail service from Apple. The service is absolutely free till 5 GB iCloud (or mailbox) storage, afterwards it will cost $ for additional storage. You can access iCloud mail from a web browser too, but you will need a iOS or macOS to setup a new mail account on iCloud.

You iCloud email account address ends with @icloud.com, @me.com, or @mac.com. You can only access IMAP and SMTP protocols with iCloud, not POP3.

Yandex mail is an absolutely free (no-ads) email service, offers unlimited mailbox storage to all users and 30 MB file attachment limit. Yandex is a Russian technology company, whose search engine is more popular than Google in Russia. The email service is absolutely awesome, and allows SMTP, POP3, and IMAP4 protocol access to all free users.

Mail.com and GMX mail are owned by the same company, and the email service from Mail.com is similar as GMX mail. Mail.com offers free (ad-supported) email service, unlimited mailbox storage and 50 MB file attachment limit.

The best thing about Mail.com is you can select an email address domain from more than 200 different domains, such as @mail.com, @email.com, @usa.com, etc., but the bad thing is you can’t access SMTP, POP3, and IMAP4 protocols as a free user.